Opening Bell: Gold Shines; Oil Gains; USD Sags Ahead Of Fed

 | Mar 21, 2018 08:15AM ET

  • US equities rebound on energy sector gains

  • Middle East diplomatic tensions, Venezuela supply dip push oil higher

  • Three headwinds still loom for stocks

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US equities gained on Tuesday, shrugging off heightened technology sector risk, mounting trade war fears and interest rate headwinds. Gains in energy shares, boosted by oil surging to nearly $64 on Middle East tensions helped trim losses from Monday's tech selloff.

    The S&P 500 advanced 0.15 percent, after losing 1.42 percent on Monday. The price is still 3 percent lower than its March 13 peak, but the index is up 1.47 YTD. Internally, sectors were split between negative and positive territory.

    Energy led the pack, posting a 0.85 percent increase, although the sector is down 8.29 percent YTD. Consumer Discretionary stocks followed, up 0.6 percent on the day, 5.88 percent for the year. The laggards were Utilities, -0.46 percent yesterday but +5.64 percent YTD, and Consumer Staples, down 0.28 yesterday but up 7.58 percent for the year. The two leaders are growth sectors, the two biggest laggards are defensive.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average outperformed among US majors, jumping 0.47 percent. However, the mega cap index is still more than 4 percent below its February 27 high, before trade war jitters hit markets. For the same period, the S&P 500 is only 2.6 percent lower. The Dow is also the only major index that has failed to post a peak higher than its February 27 high. This makes sense since the global exposure of its larger-cap stocks would be hardest hit by a trade war.